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Franco Dino Rasetti (August 10, 1901 – December 5, 2001) was an Italian (later naturalized American) physicist, paleontologist and botanist. Together with , he discovered key processes leading to . Rasetti refused to work on the Manhattan Project on moral grounds.


Life and career
Rasetti was born in Castiglione del Lago, Italy. He earned a in physics at the University of Pisa in 1923, and Fermi invited him to join his research group at the University of Rome.

In 1928-1929 during a stay at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech), he carried out experiments on the . He measured a spectrum of in 1929 which provided the first experimental evidence that the is not composed of protons and electrons, as was incorrectly believed at the time. Caltech oral history interview by Judith R. Goodstein, 4 February 1982

In 1930, he was appointed to the chair in at the Physics Institute of the University of Rome, at that time still located in Via Panisperna. His colleagues included Oscar D'Agostino, Emilio Segrè, , and Enrico Fermi, as well as the institute's director Orso Mario Corbino. Rasetti remained in this position until 1938.

Rasetti was one of Fermi's main collaborators in the study of and neutron-induced . In 1934, he participated in the discovery of the artificial radioactivity of fluorine and aluminium which would be critical in the development of the .

In 1939 the advance of fascism and the deteriorating Italian political situation led him to leave Italy, following the example of his colleagues Fermi, Segré and . With Fermi he had discovered the key to , but unlike many of his colleagues, he refused for moral reasons to work on the Manhattan Project.

From 1939 to 1947, he taught at in (Canada), where he was founding chairman of the physics department.

In 1947, he moved to the United States where he became a naturalized citizen in 1952. Until 1967, he held a chair in physics at Johns Hopkins University in .

From the 1950s onward, he gradually shifted his commitment to naturalistic studies, which had been his great interest outside of physics already as a child.Laura Fermi, Atoms in the Family He devoted himself to geology, paleontology, entomology, and botany, becoming one of the most authoritative scholars of the Cambrian geological era.

He died in , Belgium at the age of 100. The Nature obituary noted that Rasetti was one of the most prolific generalists whose work and writing are noted for the elegance, simplicity and beauty.


Raman spectroscopy and the model of the atomic nucleus
After the discovery of by organic liquids, Rasetti decided to study the same phenomenon in gases at high pressure during his stay at Caltech in 1928–29. The spectra showed vibrational transitions with rotational fine structure. In the homonuclear diatomic molecules H2, N2 and O2, Rasetti found an alternation of strong and weak lines. This alternation was explained by and as a consequence of nuclear spin isomerism.

For dihydrogen, each nucleus is a proton of spin 1/2, so that it can be shown using quantum mechanics and the Pauli exclusion principle that the odd rotational levels are more populated than the even levels.

(2026). 9780716787594, W. H. Freeman.
The transitions originating from odd levels are therefore more intense as observed by Rasetti. In dinitrogen, however, Rasetti observed that the lines originating from even levels are more intense. This implies by a similar analysis that the of nitrogen is an integer.

This result was difficult to understand at the time, however, because the had not yet been discovered, and it was thought that the 14N nucleus contains 14 protons and 7 electrons, or an odd number (21) of particles in total which would correspond to a half-integral spin. The Raman spectrum observed by Rasetti provided the first experimental evidence that this proton-electron model of the nucleus is inadequate, because the predicted half-integral spin has as a consequence that transitions from odd rotational levels would be more intense than those from even levels, due to nuclear spin isomerism as shown by Herzberg and Heitler for dihydrogen. After the discovery of the neutron in 1932, Werner Heisenberg proposed that the nucleus contains protons and neutrons, and the 14N nucleus contains 7 protons and 7 neutrons. The even total number (14) of particles corresponds to an integral spin in agreement with Rasetti's spectrum.

He is also credited with the first example of electronic (as opposed to vibronic) Raman scattering in .


Awards
  • In 1952 he was awarded the Charles Doolittle Walcott Medal by the National Academy of Sciences for his contributions to Cambrian paleontology.


External links

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